100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Solution Manual for Principles of Communications 7th Edition / All Chapters 1 - 12 / Full Complete 2023

Rating
2.7
(6)
Sold
17
Pages
573
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
27-05-2023
Written in
2022/2023

Solution Manual for Principles of Communications 7th Edition / All Chapters 1 - 12 / Full Complete 2023

Institution
Principles Of Communications
Course
Principles of Communications











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Principles of Communications
Course
Principles of Communications

Document information

Uploaded on
May 27, 2023
Number of pages
573
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

  • solution manual

Content preview

√ kT hT hT i hT × Principles of Communications 7th Edition Solution Manual Problem A.1 All parts of the problem are solved using the relation Vrms = √
4kT RB where k = 1.38 × 10—23 J/K B = 30 MHz = 3 × 107 Hz a. For R = 10, 000 ohms and T = T0 = 290 K Vrms = 4 (1.38 × 10—23) (290) (104) (3 × 107) = 6.93 × 10—5 V rms = 69.3 µV rms b. Vrms is smaller than the result in part (a) by a factor of √
10 = 3.16. Thus Vrms = 21.9 µV rms c. Vrms is smaller than the result in part (a) by a factor of √
100 = 10. Thus Vrms = 6.93 µV rms d. Each answer becomes smaller by factors of 2, √
10 = 3.16, and 10, respectively. Problem A.2 Use I = Is exp eV — 1 We want I > 20Is or exp eV — 1 > 20. a. At T = 290 K, e = 1.6x10—19 1.38x1023 x290 ~= 40, so we have exp (40V ) > 21 giving ln (21) V > 40 = 0.0761 volts 2 rms ~= 2eIB ' 2eBIs exp eV kT 2 or rms B eV = 2eIs exp kT b. If T = 90 K, then e = 2 1.6 × 10—19 1.5 × 10—5 exp (40 × 0.0761) = 1.0075 × 10—22 A2/Hz ~= 129, and for I > 20Is, we need exp(129V ) > 21 or V > ln (21) = 2.36 10—2 volts 129 i √
V = 4kT R BK K 0 Thus 2 rms B = 2 1.6 × 10—19 1.5 × 10—5 exp (129 × 0.0236) approximately as before. Problem A.3 = 1.0079 × 10—22 A2/Hz a. Use Nyquist's formula to get the equivalent circuit of R eq in parallel with R K, where Req is given by Req = R3 (R1 + R2) R1 + R2 + R3 The noise equivalent circuit consists of a rms noise voltage, V eq , in series with R eq and a rms noise voltage, V K, in series with with R K with these series combinations being in parallel. The equivalent noise voltages are Veq = √
4kT Req B The rms noise voltages across the parallel combination of Req and RK, by using superposition and voltage division, are V01 = Ve q RL Req + RK and V02 = VLRe q Req + RK Adding noise powers to get V 2 we obtain V 2 R2 V 2R2 V 2 = eq K + K eq 0 eq + RK)2 (Req + RK)2 = (4kT B) RKReq Req + RK = 4kT B RKR3 (R1 + R2) R1R3 + R2R3 + R1RK + R2RK + R3RK Note that we could have considered the parallel combination of R3 and RK as an equivalent load resistor and found the Thevenin equivalent. Let R|| = R3RK R3 + RK The Thevenin equivalent resistance of the whole circuit is then R (R1 + R2) R3 RL (R1 + R2) Req2 = || = R3 +RL R|| + R1 + R2 R3 RL R3 +RL + R1 + R2 = RKR3 (R1 + R2) R1R3 + R2R3 + R1RK + R2RK + R3RK i (R 0 0 and the mean-square output noise voltage is now V 2 = 4kT BReq2 which is the same result as obtained before. b. With R 1 = 2000 Ω, R2 = RK = 300 Ω, and R3 = 500 Ω, we have V 2 B = 4kT B = RKR3 (R1 + R2) R1R3 + R2R3 + R1RK + R2RK + R3RK 4 1.38 × 10—23 (290) (300) (500) (2000 + 300) 2000 (500) + 300 (500) + 2000 (300) + 300 (300) + 500 (300) = 2.775 × 10—18 V2/Hz Problem A.4 Find the equivalent resistance for the R1, R2, R3 combination and set RK equal to this to get R = R3 (R1 + R2) K R1 + R2 + R3 Problem A.5 Using Nyquist's formula, we find the equivalent resistance looking back into the terminals with Vrms across them. It is Req = 50 k ǁ 20 k ǁ (5 k + 10 k + 5 k) = 50 k ǁ 20 k ǁ 20 k = 50 k ǁ 10 k (50 k) (10 k) = 50 k + 10 k = 8, 333 Ω Thus which gives 2 rms = 4kT Req B = 4 1.38 × 10—23 (400) (8333) 2 × 106 = 3.68 × 10—10 V2 Vrms = 19.18 µV rms V 0 0 0 RK ǁ (R1 + RS) 2 1 + RS K S 1 2 S S 1 R2 (R1 + RS + RK) + R2 (R1 + R2 + RS) 2 RS + R 2 + (R 1 + R S ) ǁ R K 2 K Problem A.6 To find the noise figure, we first determine the noise power due to a source at the output, then due to the source and the network, and take the ratio of the latter to the former. Initally assume unmatched conditions. The results are V 2. due to RS , only = R2 ǁ RK 2 RS + R1 + R2 ǁ RK (4kT RSB) V 2. due to R1 and R2 = R2 ǁ RK 2 RS + R1 + R2 ǁ RK (4kT R1B) RK ǁ (R1 + RS) 2 V 2. due to RS , R1 and R2 = R2 ǁ RK 2 RS + R1 + R2 ǁ RK [4kT (RS + R1) B] + R2 The noise figure is (after some simplification) + (R1 + RS ) ǁ RK (4kT R2B) R1 F = 1 + RK ǁ (R1 + RS) 2 RS + R1 + R2 ǁ RK 2 R2 In the above, RS R2 + (R1 + RS) ǁ RK R2 ǁ RK RS Ra ǁ Rb RaRb = Ra + Rb Note that the noise due to R K has been excluded because it belongs to the next stage. Since this is a matching circuit, we want the input matched to the source and the output matched to the load. Matching at the input requires that RS = Rin = R1 + R2 ǁ RK = R1 + R2RK R2 + RK and matching at the output requires that RK = R out = R2 ǁ (R1 + RS ) = R2 (R1 + RS) R1 + R2 + RS Next, these expressions are substituted back into the expression for F. After some simplification, this gives R 2R2 R (R + R + R ) / (R — R ) 2 R Note that if R1 >> R2 we then have matched conditi ons of RK =~ R2 and RS =~ R1. Then, the noise figure simplifies to F = 2 + 16 R1 R2 + (4kT R2B) F = 1 +
$12.99
Get access to the full document:
Purchased by 17 students

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all 6 reviews
2 months ago

Type setting is horrible. Some problems aren't even solved and just have a little explanation on full of bs

8 months ago

Drill Problems are not included.... just the answres. pdf letters missing

1 year ago

1 year ago

2 year ago

typesetting is terrible

2 year ago

2 year ago

Thank you

2.7

6 reviews

5
1
4
1
3
1
2
1
1
2
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
NurseGrades Chamberlain College Nursing
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
7660
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
5612
Documents
1984
Last sold
8 hours ago
Nursing school is hard! Im here to simplify the information and make it easier!

My mission is to be your LIGHT in the dark. If you're worried or having trouble in nursing school, I really want my notes to be your guide! I know they have helped countless others get through and that's all I want for YOU! Stay with me and you will find everything you need to study and pass any tests, quizzes and exams!

4.0

859 reviews

5
473
4
158
3
111
2
31
1
86

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions